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Diffraction:An Experimental Perspective

Diffraction:An Experimental Perspective. Andrew Brandt University of Texas, Arlington. CTEQ Summer School June 3,4 2002 Madision, WI. Proton remnant. spectator partons. p. . . Jet. What Is Diffraction?.

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Diffraction:An Experimental Perspective

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  1. Diffraction:An Experimental Perspective Andrew Brandt University of Texas, Arlington CTEQ Summer School June 3,4 2002 Madision, WI

  2. Proton remnant spectator partons p   Jet

  3. What Is Diffraction? • Diffraction in high energy hadron physics encompasses those phenomena in which no quantum numbers are exchanged between interacting particles • Diffused particles have same quantum numbers as incident particles • Exchanging quanta of the vacuum is synonymous with the exchanging of a Pomeron • Named after Russian physicist I.Y. Pomeranchuk • Virtual (pseudo) particle carries no charge, isospin, baryon number or color • Couples through internal structure • Can be studied in occur in p-p, p-p, and e-p collisions

  4. 40 years of Diffraction 60’s: First evidence for hadronic diffraction, S matrix Regge theory, Pomeron 70’s: DIS, High pT processes. Parton model, QCD, c, τ, b, gluon 80’s: Ingelman-Schlein, BFKL 90’s: Hard Diffraction (UA8), Rapidity Gaps (Bjorken), HERA (diffraction in ep), Tevatron

  5. Outline • Diffraction • Regge Theory • Ingelman-Schlein Model • Hard Diffraction (UA8) • BFKL Theory • HERA • Color Evaporation • Tevatron • Future Thanks to many people for contributions to this talk including Michael Strang, Christophe Royon, Sergio Novaes, Kaushik De, Ken Hatakeyama, Brian Cox, Paul Newman, and Risto Orava

  6. Elastic Scattering • The particles after diffraction are the same as the incident particles • The cross section can be written as: • This has the same form as light diffracting from a small absorbing disk, hence the name diffractive phenomena A* A P B B* B* Rapidity Gap f A* h

  7. Soft Single Diffraction • One particle continues intact while the other becomes excited and breaks apart A* A P X B Rapidity Gap f A* h Experimentally, can tag outgoing beam particle or rapidity gap as signature of diffraction

  8. Mandelstam Variables • For we can use two scalar variables to describe the reaction, k (CM momentum) and q (CM scattering angle),or • This describes an s-channel reaction where s is the squared total CM energy and t is minus the squared momentum transfer • Applying relativistic invariance and crossing (Pomeranchuk theorem) we can consider an incoming particle of momentum p as an outgoing antiparticle of momentum –p and vice versa to give:

  9. Regge Theory (pre-QCD) • A Reggeon is a pole in the partial wave in the t-channel of the scattering process in the complex angular momentum plane. • At high energy, the asymptotic scattering amplitude becomes • This has the important property that at t = mR2 where mR is the mass of resonance with spin j (j = aR(t = mR2)) this formula describes the exchange of the resonance. • The function aR(t) is the Reggeon trajectory and has experimental form • The trajectories correspond to “particles” :

  10. Ingelman-Schlein Model G. Ingelman and P. Schlein, Phys. Lett. B 152, 256 (1985) • This model is an attempt to blend Regge phenomenology with QCD • Applying perturbative QCD tools, propose the cross section for diffractive hard scattering can be factorized as: • The first term is the Pomeron flux factor (probability of finding a Pomeron in particle A), while the second is the cross section of the Pomeron interacting with particle B to give X • The important variables are, x = 1 – pA/pA* , the momentum fraction of hadron A taken by the Pomeron (diffraction dominates for x < 0.05) and t, the standard momentum transfer. MX for the resultant system is given by

  11. Ingelman-Schlein II • The flux factor term has been derived by Donnachie and Landshoff after comparison to global data: • The remaining cross-section can be found from standard factorization processes to be • The only unknown is the structure function of parton a (with momentum fraction b) in the Pomeron so measurements of the cross section allow us to probe this structure function

  12. Ingelman-Schlein III • The factorization allows us to look at the diffractive reaction as a two step process. Hadron A emits a Pomeron then partons in the Pomeron interact with hadron B. • The Pomeron to leading order is proposed to have a minimal structure of two gluons in order to have quantum numbers of the vacuum A* A P J2 X J1 B

  13. Ingelman-Schlein IV • The partonic structure of the Pomeron can be probed through hard diffractive reactions and a structure function can be proposed similar to that for a proton. • Inititially considered two possible gluon structure functions: • The momentum sum rule is used for normalization: • Later extended to include other structures such as: 5

  14. Learning about the Pomeron • QCD is theory of strong interactions, but 40% of • total cross section is attributable to Pomeron • exchange -- not calculable and poorly understood • Does it have partonic structure? • Soft? Hard? Quark? Gluon? • Is it universal -- same in ep and ? • Is it the same with and withoutjet production? • Answer questions in HEP tradition -- collide it • with something that you understand to learn • its structure • Note: variables of diffraction aret and x ~ M2 • with proton tagger measure • without, just measure s

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